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Ultra Running

How to Fuel an Ultra — with Guidance from Leading Sports Nutritionists

When you run or walk for many hours in an ultramarathon, your body needs a steady supply of energy — mainly carbohydrate, plus some protein and fat — along with fluids and electrolytes. If you don't get that balance right, you risk bonking, gut issues, or being forced to slow dramatically. The good news: with the right preparation and strategy, fuelling an ultra is a learnable skill.

What is CHO?

Throughout this guide, you'll see the term CHO, which stands for carbohydrate — the body's primary source of fast energy during endurance events. CHO intake is measured in grams per hour (g/hr). Managing this carefully helps you stay fuelled without upsetting your stomach. The right CHO target is not one-size-fits-all — it depends on your pace, body weight, and how well your gut has been trained to absorb carbohydrates under race conditions.

The Science Behind Ultra Fuelling

This article draws on the work of several leading sports nutritionists:

A core principle running through all their work: what you eat on race day should never be a surprise to your body. Every element of your plan — from gels to real food to caffeine — must be rehearsed in training.

Pre-Race Nutrition: The Night Before and Race Morning

How you fuel in the 24 hours before the start line matters enormously. Arriving with well-stocked glycogen stores gives you a meaningful advantage, particularly in the opening miles when pace is higher and CHO demands are greatest.

The Night Before: Carbohydrate Loading

Aim for 7–10 g of carbohydrate per kilogram of body weight across the full day before your race — not just at dinner. For a 70 kg athlete, that's 490–700 g CHO. Spread it across meals: porridge with banana at breakfast, pasta or rice at lunch, a carbohydrate-rich evening meal. Keep fat, fibre, and protein moderate to avoid digestive discomfort. This is not the night for a large, rich restaurant meal or anything new.

Good options: white pasta or rice, bread, potatoes, bananas, fruit juice, sports drinks. Avoid high-fibre grains, legumes, and heavy sauces.

Race Morning: Easy-Digest Fuelling

Eat your last proper meal 2–3 hours before the start, targeting 1–4 g CHO per kilogram of body weight. For a 70 kg athlete that's 70–280 g — a wide range reflecting individual tolerance. Classic options: porridge with honey, white toast with jam or peanut butter, or a rice-based meal. If your stomach is nervous on race mornings, stick to the lower end or choose a liquid meal such as a smoothie or sports drink.

In the final 15–30 minutes before the start, a small gel or banana (~20–30 g CHO) is fine for most runners if needed.

Gut Training: The Most Underrated Race Preparation

No matter how sound your nutrition plan looks on paper, your gut has to be able to execute it on the day. The gastrointestinal system is trainable — but only if you put in the work before the race.

Start conservatively in training: 30–40 g CHO/hr on long runs, increasing by 10 g/hr every 2–3 weeks as tolerance builds. Over 8–12 weeks, well-trained runners can adapt to absorb up to 90 g CHO/hr using multiple carbohydrate sources (glucose + fructose combinations). Practise at intensities that match your race effort — gut stress is intensity-dependent, and fuelling that feels easy on an easy jog can become very uncomfortable at race pace. The golden rule: nothing new on race day.

Key Takeaways from the Experts

THE LAP — Example Race Context

THE LAP is a 47-mile / 75 km ultra trail race around Lake Windermere in the Lake District. It features 5 fully stocked feed stations, 1 halfway drop bag station at Troutbeck, and food including water, cordial, electrolyte drink, Coke, energy bars and gels, salty snacks, and hot pizza at Troutbeck. The aid station layout makes consistent fuelling achievable — but you still need a plan. Know roughly what you need at each stop before you arrive. Fatigue and decision fatigue both set in; removing guesswork saves energy.

How Much to Eat and Drink

Practical guidelines for a 70 kg athlete. Note that CHO targets should reflect actual effort level — 60–90 g/hr suits faster runners at moderate-to-high intensity. If you are walking or moving at a very slow pace, fat oxidation is significantly higher and your CHO needs drop considerably; 30–50 g/hr is more realistic and reduces the risk of gut overload.

Athlete TypeTypical EffortCHO TargetFluids
Fast runner6–8 min/km, sustained running60–90 g CHO/hr500–800 ml/hr + electrolytes
Steady runnerRun/walk mix45–70 g CHO/hr400–700 ml/hr + electrolytes
Walker / slower paceMostly walking30–50 g CHO/hr400–600 ml/hr + electrolytes

Example Hour-by-Hour Plan (Steady Runner)

Caffeine Strategy: Use It Wisely

Caffeine is one of the most well-researched performance aids in endurance sport. The evidence-based dose is 3–6 mg per kg of body weight — for a 70 kg athlete, that's 210–420 mg. But timing matters as much as quantity.

Don't start on caffeine. Using it from mile one when you feel fresh provides minimal benefit and burns through your tolerance early — so it delivers far less when you actually need it in the second half. Hold caffeine back until after Troutbeck (roughly the halfway mark), then use caffeinated gels, Coke at aid stations, or caffeine chews in the later miles when fatigue and focus start to slip.

Be aware: caffeine can accelerate gastric motility (it may make you need the toilet more urgently). Don't introduce high doses suddenly if you haven't trained with it. Practical sources: caffeinated gels (~25–75 mg per gel), Coke at aid stations (~35 mg per 330 ml), caffeine chews or tablets.

When GI Issues Strike: How to Respond

GI problems — nausea, bloating, cramps — are common in ultras even among well-prepared athletes. Respond calmly and systematically.

Hydration & Electrolyte Notes

Race-Day Tips

Summary

Fuelling an ultramarathon is about strategy, practice, and personal awareness — not guesswork. Arrive at the start with full glycogen stores from a well-executed carb load. Fuel consistently during the race at targets that match your actual pace and intensity — remembering that walkers need less CHO per hour than faster runners. Use caffeine strategically in the second half. Train your gut thoroughly in the weeks before so nothing on race day is a surprise. And when GI issues arise: slow down, sip water, move to savoury, return to fuelling gradually. Apply the science, and keep your energy steady across every mile of THE LAP.

References

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